BloomInWinter
VIP Member
Doc, No trust fund could undue the damage to his daughter that your suicide would do.
...she needs you in this world. Drinking is one way to cope...but it's not building good things in your life today that may bring you and your loved ones joy, healing, and peace tomorrow.
Fantasies of heroic suicides are a normal coping strategy for those of us with compassion fatigue & PTSD. It's a type of rumination that is our brain trying to heal traumas by replaying them, only with a just outcome we didn't have. But those are not healing the traumas enough to bring us healing....just a way of getting through the day.
Of course you know there are far too many people accidently killed by others while they are 'under the influence' - and these are otherwise wonderful people who handled their feelings by drinking, making a bad choice in the drunken haze....and making a mistake that they have to live with the rest of their lives.
I know that is one reason I never want to start drinking again...spending days in blackouts doing God knows what...ugh. Never want to go back there.
Your drinking does affect people, whether or not you see it. You matter to people. You are not invisible, nor is your pain and trauma. There are people who notice and probably wish they could help you. Your daughter would be collateral damage in that. How would it be for her in her life if everywhere she went, the story of your fantastic suicide kept cropping up in social media, the news....made for tv movies?
She'd be as traumatized as you are now.
Your responses and feelings are normal. The drinking and drugging, though....not likely to be helpful in the long run. ...speaking as one who has been there. It's trading off the small joys of today for avoidance of the pains of yesterday. What does that mean for your tomorrows?
Hang in there.
...she needs you in this world. Drinking is one way to cope...but it's not building good things in your life today that may bring you and your loved ones joy, healing, and peace tomorrow.
Fantasies of heroic suicides are a normal coping strategy for those of us with compassion fatigue & PTSD. It's a type of rumination that is our brain trying to heal traumas by replaying them, only with a just outcome we didn't have. But those are not healing the traumas enough to bring us healing....just a way of getting through the day.
Of course you know there are far too many people accidently killed by others while they are 'under the influence' - and these are otherwise wonderful people who handled their feelings by drinking, making a bad choice in the drunken haze....and making a mistake that they have to live with the rest of their lives.
I know that is one reason I never want to start drinking again...spending days in blackouts doing God knows what...ugh. Never want to go back there.
Your drinking does affect people, whether or not you see it. You matter to people. You are not invisible, nor is your pain and trauma. There are people who notice and probably wish they could help you. Your daughter would be collateral damage in that. How would it be for her in her life if everywhere she went, the story of your fantastic suicide kept cropping up in social media, the news....made for tv movies?
She'd be as traumatized as you are now.
Your responses and feelings are normal. The drinking and drugging, though....not likely to be helpful in the long run. ...speaking as one who has been there. It's trading off the small joys of today for avoidance of the pains of yesterday. What does that mean for your tomorrows?
Hang in there.